25 years of PDF

June 21st, 2018  |  Published in Uncategorized

Seems like just yesterday: How a tax form kludge gifted the world 25 joyous years of PDF

Not there yet

June 4th, 2018  |  Published in Uncategorized

watchOs 5 debuts with health and fitness tweaks

For communication, there’s a new “Walkie Talkie” mode, which works basically like the old-school push-to-talk functionality from Sprint cell phones but on a watch. Pick which friend you want to talk to, and if they approve the one-time Walkie Talkie permission, you’ll be able to do instant voice communication.

No video, so it isn’t a Dick Tracey two-way wrist TV yet.

Thin film transistors

April 25th, 2018  |  Published in Uncategorized

Some interesting history: The tech you’re reading these words on – you have two Dundee uni boffins to thank for that

New page on webAgent

February 13th, 2018  |  Published in Uncategorized

I revisit the page I wrote three years ago.

Width of Terminal windows

January 22nd, 2018  |  Published in Uncategorized  |  2 Comments

This is something that’s been bothering me for a while. I’ve tried googling a solution, but none of the keywords I’ve thought to try have led anywhere close. So I’m going to describe the problem here in the off chance that someone who knows the answer sees it and tells me the solution.

I use the macOS “Terminal” command a lot. I almost always have at least two windows open, and often have more. In the preferences I’ve set their width (for almost all my profiles) to 80 characters, as Herman Hollerith intended.

My MacBook Pro has a 2880×1800 Retina display. If I understand how these things work, the “Retina” part means macOS scales things at a 2-to-1 ratio, so that it acts like a super-sharp 1440×900 display. In my office I have an external Dell 2009W display that I connect to the MacBook Pro whenever I’m at work. Its resolution is 1680×1050. (If I’m wrong about how the Retina display works, I at least know for sure that a window that fills the laptop monitor does not fill the external display.) I have the displays arranged side-by-side (not mirrored) so I can use all the screen real estate possible. I also use Mission Control, with “Displays have separate Spaces” selected in the System Preferences. Terminal is assigned to a Desktop that appears on the external monitor when it’s connected.

Very annoyingly, usually when I connect to the external monitor, the width of my Terminal windows are increased by one or two (or occasionally more) characters. When I disconnect the monitor, correspondingly, the width is decreased. It’s not consistent, though; sometimes the widths don’t change, and sometimes they change by seven or more characters. The vertical size doesn’t change (unless I’ve increased it while on the external monitor so it won’t fit on the laptop display.) I really want these windows to always be 80 characters wide, regardless of which monitor they appear on. Does anyone know of a way to fix this?

Early web apps

September 20th, 2017  |  Published in Uncategorized

A walk down memory lane: The First Web Apps: 5 Apps That Shaped the Internet as We Know It. For those that weren’t around, I started working on webAgent 1 in June 1995 and we stood up our first webAgent application in September of that year. (We actually had a couple of web apps written in a mixture of Perl and Natural running before I started on webAgent.)

Death march

August 29th, 2017  |  Published in Uncategorized

Adam has thoughts about Goal Odysseys, and I agree with what he says. If anyone can save the ASMP/Workday project, it’s Dana, but I also have doubts about it being salvageable.

Some day I’d like to hear a good explanation of why we’re doing this. If anyone could do that, we might be able to figure out what we should be doing.

SMTP is 35

August 2nd, 2017  |  Published in Uncategorized

If you love your email standards, SMTP your feet: 35 years later

This month marks the 35th anniversary of the sign-off of RFC 821, the first definition of the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, that everyday staple of email comms.

So, about a month after the release of E.T.: The Extraterrestrial and a few months before I got married.

INTERCAL

July 7th, 2017  |  Published in Uncategorized

I’m preparing to teach a section on programming languages for SY 101 next week. Too bad I don’t have enough time to talk about INTERCAL.

R.I.P Jean Sammet

June 5th, 2017  |  Published in Uncategorized  |  1 Comment

While Grace Hopper is often called “the Mother of COBOL,” Ms. Sammet was actually on the committee that designed it. She was 89.

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